The Write Point of View: Who are you talking to?


Ghost writer, editor, and writing teacher Kim Pearson posted a great blog entry yesterday about finding the WOW factor in writing: “If you want to wow your readers, your writing must be about them.” She says, “If you’re writing for yourself, you are journaling.”

Kim may be talking about writing for publication (including blog posts like this), but this is important advice for memoir writers, too, whether you intend to publish for others or just want to take your flash drive to Kinko’s for some simple spiral-bound copies. If you’re going to take the trouble to write down your stories, make them interesting for everyone. Hopefully you’ve got the grandkids in mind as you spin your tales onto paper. Imagine them at your knee. Imagine your own kids hanging onto your words, or your brother or sister laughing (or even crying) at the stories they know well, too. Think like a storyteller spinning yarns, adding anecdotes, describing scenes, wrapping a story up with a piece of reflection or a lesson learned. Sure your family wants to hear about you, but they want to be a part of your stories, too – to feel it, to learn from it, to have it speak to something within themselves. Maybe the best way to talk about your life is to imagine telling a bedtime story, “A long time ago, I….” Hey, that how my mother’s memoir begins! Cherry Blossoms in Twilight: Memories of a Japanese Girl.


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Taps, the words and the memories


Taps

Day is done,
Gone the sun
From the lakes,
From the hills,
From the sky.
All is well,
Safely rest,
God is nigh.

Fading light
Dims the sight,
And a star
Gems the sky
Gleaming bright.
From afar
Drawing nigh
Falls the night.

Thanks and praise
For our days
Neath the sun,
Neath the stars,
Neath the sky.
As we go,
This we know,
God is nigh


Blessed are the memories remaining.

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Heather Summerhayes Cariou blooms with Sixtyfive Roses memoir

Heather Summerhayes Cariou managed to take a deep tragedy, the loss of her sister to cystic fibrosis, and turn it into a journey of healing and personal growth through the writing of a memoir, Sixyfive Roses, a play on the name of the disease that’s difficult for kids to pronounce. CF is an inherited disorder that literally chokes the life from its young victims, although great strides have been made in research to make the median age of survival now more than 35 years. Pam Summerhayes, diagnosed at age 4, died at the age of 26.

While Heather wanted to write a memoir of Pam in tribute to her sister’s strength and bravery, she discovered she had to tell the story in her own words, and in the writing Pam voice spoke. While Sixtyfive Roses has no happy ending, it is an inspirational story that has attracted readers with its tenderness and courage and its message that “we can choose our joy in each moment, no matter what.” The Summerhayes family helped found the Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and a percentage of the proceeds from the Sixtyfive Roses book goes towards that organization as well as to the CF Foundation of the U.S.

Heather Cariou is a recent guest on Women’s Memoirs, a blog by authors Matilda Butler and Kendra Bonnett who co-wrote Rosie’s Daughters, a collective memoir of stories of the can-do women of the generation following “Rosie the Riveter.” Heather’s May 19 guest post is well worth reading for those contemplating writing a memoir. In just one post she gives informative and encouraging advice that encompasses the highlights of all memoir writing books combined.
Heather will be interviewed by Butler and Bonnet via phone conference line this Friday, May 22, 10am Pacific (1pm Eastern). Check the Women’s Memoirs website for the phone number and access code so you can listen in.

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